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THE CAMBRIAN EXPLOSION
“Featured Scientists”

    James Valentine

 Simon Conway-Morris

      Paul Chien

    Jonathan Wells

   Richard Sternberg

     Douglas Axe

     Paul Nelson

    Stephen Meyer
CHARLES DARWIN

     “Consequently, if my theory be true, it is
     indisputable that before the lowest Silurian
     stratum was deposited, long periods
     elapsed, as long as, or probably far longer
     than, the whole interval from the Silurian
     age to the present day; and that during
     these vast, yet quite unknown periods of
     time, the world swarmed with living
     creatures. To the question why we do not
     nd records of these vast primordial
     periods, I can give no satisfactory answer.”
LOUIS AGASSIZ
DUANE T. GISH (1974)

“In the Cambrian geological strata there occurs a sudden, great
outburst of fossils of animals on a highly developed level of
complexity. In the Cambrian rocks are found billions of fossils of
animals so complex that the evolutionists estimate they would have
required one and a half billion years to evolve. Trilobites, brachiopods,
sponges, corals, jellysh, in fact every one of the major invertebrate
forms of life are found in the Cambrian. What is found in rocks
supposedly older than the Cambrian, that is in the so-called pre-
Cambrian rocks? Not a single indisputable fossil! Certainly it can be
said without fear of contradiction, the evolutionary predecessors of
the Cambrian fauna have never been found.”
PANDAS AND PEOPLE

      “[S]ome organisms appear with
      adaptational packages intact at the
      Cambrian boundary where multicellular
      life first ‘flowers,’ with no evidence
      whatsoever of fossil ancestors… only an
      intelligent designer has the ability to
      coordinate the design requirements of
      multifunctional adaptational
      packages.” (71-72)
The Cambrian
Explosion “presents a
 serious challenge to
Darwinian evolution”
“From nothing, we
   have almost
everything, almost
    overnight.”
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
CAMBRIAN (542 ¹ 0.3 TO 488.3 ¹ 1.7 MYBP)
TREPTICHNUS PEDUM
TRILOBITE
CAMBRIAN BOUNDARIES
• Noice-caps, deserted land
 masses

• Oxygen at 63% of modern,
 carbon dioxide at ~16 times
 pre-industrial levels

• Surface
        temperature at 7
 degrees C above present

• Sealevel at 30 - 90m above
 present

• Warm  shallow seas at
 continental edges

• Presence   of lagerstätten
PRE-CAMBRIAN
CAMBRIAN
BECOMING
 A FOSSIL
MICHAEL DENTON



     “An irreducible gap in phenotypic space
     [i.e. morphology] cannot be taken to
     imply that there is a similar gap in
     genotypic space [i.e. genetics].”
SOME KEY IDEAS



Cambrian Explosion – the geologically sudden appearance of many of
the Metazoan phyla.

Metazoan – multicellular organisms
PHYLUM


Morphological branch of the tree of life

Group of organisms sharing a “major body plan”

Number of extant phyla differ depending on source, but generally
taken to be in the low to mid thirties.

Therefore, we should be careful of “essentializing” them.
ARTHROPODA
Protostomes and Deuterostomes are two superphyla within
the Bilateria differentiated by embryonic cleavage patterns.
Morphological   Molecular
FOUR QUESTIONS


1. Was there a Pre-Cambrian fauna?

2. What (if anything) happened in the Cambrian?

3. Is the “explosion” a real event or an artifact of preservation?

4. How did it happen?
WAS THERE A PRE-CAMBRIAN FAUNA?
RICHARD DAWKINS

      “Evolution makes the strong
      prediction that if a single fossil turned
      up in the wrong geological stratum,
      the theory would be blown out of
      the water. When challenged by a
      zealous Popperian to say how
      evolution could ever be falsied, J.B.S.
      Haldane famously growled: 'Fossil
      rabbits in the Precambrian.’ No such
      anachronistic fossils have ever been
      authentically found...”
Wassahpdug haldanei
STROMATOLITES (3,500 MY)
Lack of grazing predators
BANGIOMORPHA
(RED ALGAE - 1,200 MYBP)
Pre-Cambrian Trace Fossils




    Early Trace Fossils      Late Trace Fossils
EDIACARIAN FAUNA (575 MY)
Charniodiscusarboreus    Spriggina
      Cnidarian         Arthropod
SPRIGGINA
Arkarua    Kimberella
Echinoderm    Mollusc
Parvancorina
Precambrian trilobite ancestor
       (Arthropod)
“Small Shelly”
   Fauna
PRE-CAMBRIAN TIMELINE
                 SOFT-BODIED ORGANISMS

3,460 mybp - Stromatolites (microbial mats - “prokaryotes”)

2,700 mybp - Oxygen-generating photosynthesis

2,200 mybp - Single-celled eukaryotes

1,200 mbyp - Multicellular eukaryotes (red algae)

1,100 mybp – Trace fossils (burrowing & movement)

600 mybp – Early bilaterans

575 mybp – Edicarian Fauna – Unknown affinities (?)

570 mybp – Possible Metazoan embryos (see later)

545 mybp – “Small shelly” fauna
WHAT (IF ANYTHING) HAPPENED IN THE CAMBRIAN?
Charles Walcott
Marella
Sidneyia
inexpectans
Waptia
Crustaceans
Ottoia
(priapulid)
Opabina (lobopod)
Hallucigenia
Hallucigenia
Modern onycophoran
Pikia
Chordates
Chordates
Yunnanozoon (hemichordate)
JONATHAN WELLS

    “Why don’t textbooks discuss the Cambrian
    explosion, in which all major animal groups
    appear together in the fossil record fully formed
    instead of branching from a common ancestor –
    thus contradicting the evolutionary tree of life?”

    Reply: Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and
    mammals all are post-Cambrian - aren’t these
    “major groups”?

    Wells: “Fish DID make their first appearance in
    the Cambrian explosion.”
“Here we describe a recently discovered craniate-like
chordate, Haikouella lanceolata, … These findings indicate that
Haikouella probably represents a very early craniate-like
chordate that lived near the beginning of the Cambrian
period”
 Jun-Yuan Chen, Di-Ying Huang and Chia-Wei Li, “An early Cambrian craniate-
                                like chordate,” Nature 402 (1999), 518-522.
Is this an Ediacarian chordate?
“The Cambrian explosion gave rise to
most of the animal phyla alive today, as
well as some that are now extinct.” (p. 39).

Chart gives 18 “major living animal phyla”

“One phylum (the sponges) and possibly
two others appeared just before the
Cambria; two worm phyla appeared much
later, in the Carboniferous … and one
[phylum] in the Ordovician.”

Therefore, claim is that 12 of 18 (66%)
phyla appeared in the Cambrian
Placozoa

                          Mesozoa

                       Platyhelminthes

Extant Phyla without   Gnathostomulida

   a fossil record       Gastrotricha

                       Acantochephala

     12 of 34             Loricifera

                         Kinorhyncha
       35%              Pogonophora

                          Sipuncula

                          Phoronida

                        Urochordata
Echinodermata

                    Cnidaria

                    Porifera

Pre-Cambrian        Mollusca

                  Arthropoda
 5 + 4 of 34

 15 to 26%        Chordata (?)

                  Annelida (?)

               Platyhelminthes (?)

                   Echiura (?)
Brachiopoda

           Onychophora
Cambrian
            Tardigrada
 6 of 34
            Priapulida
  18%
           Chaetognatha

           Hemichordata
Bryozoa

                 Ctenophora
Post-Cambrian     Nematoda

   7 of 34        Nemertini

    21%          Entoprocta

                   Rotifera

                Nematomorpha
Extant Phyla with a Fossil Record




                                    Pre-Cambrian
                                    Cambrian
                                    Post-Cambrian
Well’s version




                 Pre-Cambrian
                 Cambrian
                 Post-Cambrian
Extinct Phyla

Pre-Cambrian: 5

 Cambrian: 17

Post-Cambrian: 1
All Phyla with a Fossil Record




                                 Pre-Cambrian
                                 Cambrian
                                 Post-Cambrian
WAS THE “EXPLOSION” REAL?
STEPHEN MEYER

“If you can preserve [a pre-Cambrian] embryo, you can preserve an
animal. If those animals were there, we should have found them. And
they’re not there.”

But:

       •   Special conditions required for preservation

       •   We haven’t found pre-Cambrian adult sponges but they must
           have existed

       •   Pre-Cambrian specimens create a problem for the “explosion”!
EXPERIMENTAL TAPHONOMY
                                               “Under conditions that prevent
                                               autolysis, embryos within the fertilization
                                               envelope can be preserved with good
                                               morphology for sufciently long periods
                                               for mineralization to occur. ... Although
                                               embryos within the fertilization
                                               envelope have high preservation
                                               potential, primary larvae have negligible
                                               preservation potential. Thus the paleo-
                                               embryological record may have strong
                                               biases on developmental stages
                                               preserved.”

   Raff EC, Villinski JT, Turner FR, Donoghu PCJ, Raff RA (2006) Proc Nat Acad Sci USA 103(15):5846-5851.
LAGERSTÄTTEN
LAGERSTÄTTEN
CONCLUSION FROM
         THE FOSSIL DATA
Metazoans certainly originated signicantly earlier than 570my.
A date of 700my would not conflict with the evidence
currently to hand.

We thus see an approximately 170 million year period for the
evolution of the Cambrian fauna.

A exponential increase in diversity occurs in the Cambrian
                                  (Valentine et al, 1999, Development 126: 851)
WHAT ABOUT
GENETIC DATA?

    “The basal animal phyla (Porifera,
    Ctenophora and Cnidaria) diverged
    between about 1200 – 1500 MYA.
    This suggests that at least six animal
    phyla originated deep in the
    Precambrian, more than 400 million
    years earlier than their rst
    appearance in the fossil record.”
OTHER ESTIMATES

• Bromham   et al.(1998): 1,500 mybp

       Meyer gives this as 680 my

• Ayala, Rzhetsky
              & Ayala (1998): 670 mybp for Protostome /
 Deuterostome split

       Still 130my before the start of the Cambrian
REVIEW IN 2005

“[M]olecular data analyzed over the past 3 decades have
found deeper divergences among animals (~800 to 1,200
MYA), with and without the assumption of a global molecular
clock. Recently, two studies have instead reported time
estimates apparently consistent with the fossil record. Here,
we demonstrate that methodological problems in these
studies cast doubt on the accuracy and interpretations of the
results obtained. ... With these results aside, molecular clocks
continue to support a long period of animal evolution before
the Cambrian explosion of fossils.”
THREE POINTS
        WORTH REMEMBERING
• Majorbranches on the Tree of Life (e.g. fungi, bacteria and
 other groups) actually pre-date the Cambrian.

• All
    plants post-date the Cambrian, and flowering plants, by far
 the dominant form of land life today, only appeared about 140
 mya

• None of the animal groups that people think of as major
 taxonomic groups, such as mammals, reptiles, birds, or insects,
 appeared in the Cambrian.
POST-CAMBRIAN PLANTS
CHORDATE DIVERSIFICATION
POST-CAMBRIAN

•   Paleozoic (510 – 245my): Origin of plants, insects, bony fish,
    amphibians, reptiles, mammal-like reptiles,

•   Permian (marine) extinction

•   Mesozoic (245 – 65 my): Radiation of dinosaurs, early mammals &
    birds. Appearance of flowering plants

•   Cretaceous extinction

•   Cenozoic (65 my – present): Major radiation of mammals, birds &
    insects. Origin of primates and humans
Crown Group




       Stem Group
OUR FIVE QUESTIONS

Was there a Pre-Cambrian fauna?

      Yes – including multicellular ancestors of Cambrian forms.

What happened in the Cambrian?

      A geologically rapid morphological diversication

Is the explosion real?

      Yes, but it was phenotypic rather than genotypic.

How did it happen?
HOW DID IT HAPPEN?
HOW DID IT HAPPEN?
HOW DID IT HAPPEN?

       Environmental changes

       Opening of new niches

       Development of predator/prey systems

       Development of visual systems

       Ecological feedback

       Activation of genetic pathways (see next
       week)

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The Cambrian Explosion

  • 2. “Featured Scientists” James Valentine Simon Conway-Morris Paul Chien Jonathan Wells Richard Sternberg Douglas Axe Paul Nelson Stephen Meyer
  • 3. CHARLES DARWIN “Consequently, if my theory be true, it is indisputable that before the lowest Silurian stratum was deposited, long periods elapsed, as long as, or probably far longer than, the whole interval from the Silurian age to the present day; and that during these vast, yet quite unknown periods of time, the world swarmed with living creatures. To the question why we do not nd records of these vast primordial periods, I can give no satisfactory answer.”
  • 5. DUANE T. GISH (1974) “In the Cambrian geological strata there occurs a sudden, great outburst of fossils of animals on a highly developed level of complexity. In the Cambrian rocks are found billions of fossils of animals so complex that the evolutionists estimate they would have required one and a half billion years to evolve. Trilobites, brachiopods, sponges, corals, jellysh, in fact every one of the major invertebrate forms of life are found in the Cambrian. What is found in rocks supposedly older than the Cambrian, that is in the so-called pre- Cambrian rocks? Not a single indisputable fossil! Certainly it can be said without fear of contradiction, the evolutionary predecessors of the Cambrian fauna have never been found.”
  • 6. PANDAS AND PEOPLE “[S]ome organisms appear with adaptational packages intact at the Cambrian boundary where multicellular life rst ‘flowers,’ with no evidence whatsoever of fossil ancestors… only an intelligent designer has the ability to coordinate the design requirements of multifunctional adaptational packages.” (71-72)
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9. The Cambrian Explosion “presents a serious challenge to Darwinian evolution”
  • 10. “From nothing, we have almost everything, almost overnight.”
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 16. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 17. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 18. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 19. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 20. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 21. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 22. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 23. Biola - “ID and the Future of Science” - 2004
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31.
  • 32. CAMBRIAN (542 ¹ 0.3 TO 488.3 ¹ 1.7 MYBP)
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 40. • Noice-caps, deserted land masses • Oxygen at 63% of modern, carbon dioxide at ~16 times pre-industrial levels • Surface temperature at 7 degrees C above present • Sealevel at 30 - 90m above present • Warm shallow seas at continental edges • Presence of lagerstätten
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 46. MICHAEL DENTON “An irreducible gap in phenotypic space [i.e. morphology] cannot be taken to imply that there is a similar gap in genotypic space [i.e. genetics].”
  • 47.
  • 48.
  • 49. SOME KEY IDEAS Cambrian Explosion – the geologically sudden appearance of many of the Metazoan phyla. Metazoan – multicellular organisms
  • 50. PHYLUM Morphological branch of the tree of life Group of organisms sharing a “major body plan” Number of extant phyla differ depending on source, but generally taken to be in the low to mid thirties. Therefore, we should be careful of “essentializing” them.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 54. Protostomes and Deuterostomes are two superphyla within the Bilateria differentiated by embryonic cleavage patterns.
  • 55. Morphological Molecular
  • 56. FOUR QUESTIONS 1. Was there a Pre-Cambrian fauna? 2. What (if anything) happened in the Cambrian? 3. Is the “explosion” a real event or an artifact of preservation? 4. How did it happen?
  • 57. WAS THERE A PRE-CAMBRIAN FAUNA?
  • 58. RICHARD DAWKINS “Evolution makes the strong prediction that if a single fossil turned up in the wrong geological stratum, the theory would be blown out of the water. When challenged by a zealous Popperian to say how evolution could ever be falsied, J.B.S. Haldane famously growled: 'Fossil rabbits in the Precambrian.’ No such anachronistic fossils have ever been authentically found...”
  • 60.
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 64. Lack of grazing predators
  • 66. Pre-Cambrian Trace Fossils Early Trace Fossils Late Trace Fossils
  • 67.
  • 68.
  • 70.
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73.
  • 74. Charniodiscusarboreus Spriggina Cnidarian Arthropod
  • 76. Arkarua Kimberella Echinoderm Mollusc
  • 78.
  • 80. PRE-CAMBRIAN TIMELINE SOFT-BODIED ORGANISMS 3,460 mybp - Stromatolites (microbial mats - “prokaryotes”) 2,700 mybp - Oxygen-generating photosynthesis 2,200 mybp - Single-celled eukaryotes 1,200 mbyp - Multicellular eukaryotes (red algae) 1,100 mybp – Trace fossils (burrowing & movement) 600 mybp – Early bilaterans 575 mybp – Edicarian Fauna – Unknown afnities (?) 570 mybp – Possible Metazoan embryos (see later) 545 mybp – “Small shelly” fauna
  • 81. WHAT (IF ANYTHING) HAPPENED IN THE CAMBRIAN?
  • 82.
  • 83.
  • 84.
  • 85.
  • 86.
  • 87.
  • 88.
  • 89.
  • 91.
  • 92.
  • 93.
  • 94.
  • 99.
  • 100.
  • 101.
  • 102.
  • 108.
  • 109.
  • 110. Pikia
  • 111.
  • 112.
  • 115.
  • 117. JONATHAN WELLS “Why don’t textbooks discuss the Cambrian explosion, in which all major animal groups appear together in the fossil record fully formed instead of branching from a common ancestor – thus contradicting the evolutionary tree of life?” Reply: Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals all are post-Cambrian - aren’t these “major groups”? Wells: “Fish DID make their rst appearance in the Cambrian explosion.”
  • 118. “Here we describe a recently discovered craniate-like chordate, Haikouella lanceolata, … These ndings indicate that Haikouella probably represents a very early craniate-like chordate that lived near the beginning of the Cambrian period” Jun-Yuan Chen, Di-Ying Huang and Chia-Wei Li, “An early Cambrian craniate- like chordate,” Nature 402 (1999), 518-522.
  • 119.
  • 120.
  • 121.
  • 122.
  • 123. Is this an Ediacarian chordate?
  • 124.
  • 125.
  • 126. “The Cambrian explosion gave rise to most of the animal phyla alive today, as well as some that are now extinct.” (p. 39). Chart gives 18 “major living animal phyla” “One phylum (the sponges) and possibly two others appeared just before the Cambria; two worm phyla appeared much later, in the Carboniferous … and one [phylum] in the Ordovician.” Therefore, claim is that 12 of 18 (66%) phyla appeared in the Cambrian
  • 127.
  • 128. Placozoa Mesozoa Platyhelminthes Extant Phyla without Gnathostomulida a fossil record Gastrotricha Acantochephala 12 of 34 Loricifera Kinorhyncha 35% Pogonophora Sipuncula Phoronida Urochordata
  • 129. Echinodermata Cnidaria Porifera Pre-Cambrian Mollusca Arthropoda 5 + 4 of 34 15 to 26% Chordata (?) Annelida (?) Platyhelminthes (?) Echiura (?)
  • 130. Brachiopoda Onychophora Cambrian Tardigrada 6 of 34 Priapulida 18% Chaetognatha Hemichordata
  • 131. Bryozoa Ctenophora Post-Cambrian Nematoda 7 of 34 Nemertini 21% Entoprocta Rotifera Nematomorpha
  • 132. Extant Phyla with a Fossil Record Pre-Cambrian Cambrian Post-Cambrian
  • 133. Well’s version Pre-Cambrian Cambrian Post-Cambrian
  • 134. Extinct Phyla Pre-Cambrian: 5 Cambrian: 17 Post-Cambrian: 1
  • 135. All Phyla with a Fossil Record Pre-Cambrian Cambrian Post-Cambrian
  • 137.
  • 138.
  • 139.
  • 140.
  • 141. STEPHEN MEYER “If you can preserve [a pre-Cambrian] embryo, you can preserve an animal. If those animals were there, we should have found them. And they’re not there.” But: • Special conditions required for preservation • We haven’t found pre-Cambrian adult sponges but they must have existed • Pre-Cambrian specimens create a problem for the “explosion”!
  • 142. EXPERIMENTAL TAPHONOMY “Under conditions that prevent autolysis, embryos within the fertilization envelope can be preserved with good morphology for sufciently long periods for mineralization to occur. ... Although embryos within the fertilization envelope have high preservation potential, primary larvae have negligible preservation potential. Thus the paleo- embryological record may have strong biases on developmental stages preserved.” Raff EC, Villinski JT, Turner FR, Donoghu PCJ, Raff RA (2006) Proc Nat Acad Sci USA 103(15):5846-5851.
  • 145. CONCLUSION FROM THE FOSSIL DATA Metazoans certainly originated signicantly earlier than 570my. A date of 700my would not conflict with the evidence currently to hand. We thus see an approximately 170 million year period for the evolution of the Cambrian fauna. A exponential increase in diversity occurs in the Cambrian (Valentine et al, 1999, Development 126: 851)
  • 146. WHAT ABOUT GENETIC DATA? “The basal animal phyla (Porifera, Ctenophora and Cnidaria) diverged between about 1200 – 1500 MYA. This suggests that at least six animal phyla originated deep in the Precambrian, more than 400 million years earlier than their rst appearance in the fossil record.”
  • 147. OTHER ESTIMATES • Bromham et al.(1998): 1,500 mybp Meyer gives this as 680 my • Ayala, Rzhetsky & Ayala (1998): 670 mybp for Protostome / Deuterostome split Still 130my before the start of the Cambrian
  • 148. REVIEW IN 2005 “[M]olecular data analyzed over the past 3 decades have found deeper divergences among animals (~800 to 1,200 MYA), with and without the assumption of a global molecular clock. Recently, two studies have instead reported time estimates apparently consistent with the fossil record. Here, we demonstrate that methodological problems in these studies cast doubt on the accuracy and interpretations of the results obtained. ... With these results aside, molecular clocks continue to support a long period of animal evolution before the Cambrian explosion of fossils.”
  • 149. THREE POINTS WORTH REMEMBERING • Majorbranches on the Tree of Life (e.g. fungi, bacteria and other groups) actually pre-date the Cambrian. • All plants post-date the Cambrian, and flowering plants, by far the dominant form of land life today, only appeared about 140 mya • None of the animal groups that people think of as major taxonomic groups, such as mammals, reptiles, birds, or insects, appeared in the Cambrian.
  • 150.
  • 151.
  • 154. POST-CAMBRIAN • Paleozoic (510 – 245my): Origin of plants, insects, bony sh, amphibians, reptiles, mammal-like reptiles, • Permian (marine) extinction • Mesozoic (245 – 65 my): Radiation of dinosaurs, early mammals & birds. Appearance of flowering plants • Cretaceous extinction • Cenozoic (65 my – present): Major radiation of mammals, birds & insects. Origin of primates and humans
  • 155.
  • 156.
  • 157.
  • 158.
  • 159. Crown Group Stem Group
  • 160. OUR FIVE QUESTIONS Was there a Pre-Cambrian fauna? Yes – including multicellular ancestors of Cambrian forms. What happened in the Cambrian? A geologically rapid morphological diversication Is the explosion real? Yes, but it was phenotypic rather than genotypic. How did it happen?
  • 161. HOW DID IT HAPPEN?
  • 162.
  • 163.
  • 164.
  • 165.
  • 166. HOW DID IT HAPPEN?
  • 167. HOW DID IT HAPPEN? Environmental changes Opening of new niches Development of predator/prey systems Development of visual systems Ecological feedback Activation of genetic pathways (see next week)

Editor's Notes

  1. BAD PEDAGOGY!!!!! No time scale No relationships between groups No names of groups Pre-cambrian record?
  2. HALDANE
  3. 1. Precambrian forms 2. Disparity and Diversity rise together